Evidence for Mesozoic shear along the western Kunlun and Altyn-Tagh fault, northern Tibet (China)

  • Arnaud N
  • Tapponnier P
  • Roger F
  • et al.
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Abstract

[1] The strike-slip faults of north Tibet accommodate part of the Cenozoic convergence between India and Asia. Along the Karakax valley south of Yecheng and near the Xidatan trough south of Golmud, the active traces of the Altyn-Tagh and Kunlun faults follow narrow belts of metamorphic rocks. The deformation recorded in those mylonites is sinistral strike-slip. Rb/Sr and Ar-40/Ar-39 ages of deformation from syntectonic fabrics formed at 350-400degreesC 120 Ma. Argon loss suggests that deformation was associated to a 250-300degreesC thermal pulse that lasted 5-20 Ma after the onset of movement. Unroofing occurred much later, around 25 Ma when sudden cooling suggests a component of thrusting or more likely normal faulting. The Cretaceous shear may be related to collision between the Qiantang and the Lhasa blocks. The Karakax and Xidatan shear zones may have formed a unique, continuous boundary in the Cretaceous, which was later reused by the Tertiary strike-slip faults, leading to potentially calculable offsets along the Altyn-Tagh fault.

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APA

Arnaud, N., Tapponnier, P., Roger, F., Brunel, M., Scharer, U., Wen, C., & Zhiqin, X. (2003). Evidence for Mesozoic shear along the western Kunlun and Altyn-Tagh fault, northern Tibet (China). Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 108(B1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2001jb000904

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